Community Details at a Glance
The Homes
Product
Older single-family homes, including brick ranch and split-level and tri-level designs
Builder
Established neighborhood built largely from the mid 1950s into the 1960s
Sizes
Roughly 1,500 to 2,400 square feet on established lots
Ownership
Fee-simple single-family; most streets have no mandatory homeowners association
Costs & Fees
HOA
Most streets carry no mandatory HOA; confirm whether a specific property does
CDD
None found in third-party sources; verify on title
Reality
Roof age, systems, and the flood zone drive the insurance line on these older homes
Amenities
Setting
Established residential neighborhood, not an amenity community
Location
Central Southside near University Boulevard, minutes from downtown and San Marco
Parks
Area parks and the St. Johns River close by
Retail
Southside retail corridors a short drive
Location
Setting
Southside Jacksonville near University Boulevard, between the St. Johns River and I-95, ZIP 32216
Shopping
University Boulevard and Philips Highway corridors; San Marco minutes away
Access
Minutes to I-95, downtown, and the Southside job centers
Beaches
Jacksonville beaches about 25 minutes
The Homes & Style
Killarney Shores is a mid-range, central Southside neighborhood, and the value comes from the location rather than amenities. As an established single-family neighborhood, it prices in the middle of the Southside range, a step below the adjacent San Marco district while sharing much of the same central convenience.
The buyer pool is value-minded owner-occupants who want a central Southside address near downtown and San Marco, plus buyers drawn to the renovation upside on the older housing stock.
Killarney Shores is an established single-family neighborhood, so the variation is mostly in home age, condition, and lot.
Most homes are older single-family houses on established lots, including brick ranch and split-level and tri-level designs, in a range of sizes and conditions.
Updated and renovated homes add range at the upper end, while original homes sit at the lower end of the neighborhood's prices, so condition is the main swing in value.
Living Here
Killarney Shores is an established residential neighborhood rather than an amenity community, and its appeal is the central location.
The neighborhood sits minutes from downtown, the river, and the Southside job centers, which is the main draw for the price.
Area parks and the St. Johns River are close, and the Southside retail corridors put shopping and dining within a short drive.
Everyday shopping and dining sit along the University Boulevard and Philips Highway corridors, with San Marco minutes away and the St. Johns Town Center about 15 minutes for big-box and upscale options.
Lots closer to the river can sit in a flood zone. Confirm the flood zone and the insurance before you commit, especially on a low-lying property.
Killarney Shores has a range of conditions and some renovation activity. Look at the specific street and the recent comparable sales rather than the area average.
Before You Offer
Jacksonville sees coastal, river, and creek flooding, and pockets near the St. Johns River tributaries can sit in higher-risk zones. Jacksonville participates in the FEMA Community Rating System at a class 6, which earns flood-insurance discounts of about 10 percent for homes outside a special flood hazard area and about 20 percent for homes inside one.
The reliable move is to pull the FEMA flood designation for the exact Killarney Shores address before you write an offer, since two homes on the same street can fall in different zones, and lots closer to the river run higher risk. A home in Zone X can cost far less to insure than one near water in Zone AE. Get a bindable flood and homeowners quote during your inspection period, so the cost is in your monthly math before you commit, not after.
Because the homes are older, the insurance line hinges on the roof age, the wiring, and the plumbing. Confirm the four-point inspection items and the roof age early, since they drive both the premium and insurability on a mid-1950s to 1960s home.
The Jacksonville metro is served by Xfinity (Comcast) cable across nearly all addresses and by AT&T with DSL almost everywhere plus fiber to a growing share of homes. If working from home matters, confirm the options, and fiber in particular, at the specific Killarney Shores address rather than assuming.
Duval County total millage runs roughly 17.9 to 18.5 mills depending on the taxing district. The Florida homestead exemption for 2026 is 51,411 dollars for those who qualify, and the deadline to file a new homestead exemption is March 1. Plan for the post-sale reset, when the Save Our Homes cap from the prior owner ends and the assessed value resets to the new just value, so your second-year tax bill is often higher than the seller's current one.
Comparisons
Killarney Shores' natural cross-shops are the other established single-family neighborhoods of the central Southside near University Boulevard. Against the adjacent San Marco district, Killarney Shores prices well below while sharing much of the same central convenience to downtown and the river, with the trade being a quieter, less marquee address and older condition. Against the nearby Southside Estates and University Boulevard neighborhoods, Killarney Shores offers a comparable era of housing and a similar value entry, where the deciding factors are the specific street, the lot, and the flood zone rather than the neighborhood name. And against the newer single-family communities farther out on the Southside, Killarney Shores gives up new construction and uniform finishes but gains a central location, mature lots, and renovation upside. The honest summary: Killarney Shores wins on central location and value entry, and gives ground on prestige and build age to San Marco and the newer Southside developments.
Who It Fits
Killarney Shores fits the value-minded buyer who wants a central Southside address minutes from downtown, San Marco, and the river at a price below the marquee neighborhoods, the renovation-minded buyer who wants to add value to an older home on an established lot, and the buyer who prizes location and a no-HOA carrying cost over new finishes. It also fits the buyer comfortable with an older home who will budget the roof, the systems, and the flood-zone insurance honestly. It does not fit the buyer who wants new construction with a builder warranty, the buyer who wants a gated, amenity-rich community with a pool and clubhouse, or the buyer who is not prepared for the maintenance and insurance realities of a mid-1950s to 1960s house. And because condition and the flood zone vary so much street to street, anyone shopping here should price off the specific street and the recent comparable sales rather than the area average.



















